EyeonMiami Needs your help! Miami,Florida
By Geniusofdespair at 16 May, 2009, 7:47 am
Print this Florida Hometown Democracy petition. Get your friends, relatives and neighbors to sign it. Get it in ASAP. It is down to the wire: “By now, most adults understand that Florida’s entire economy has been wrecked by over development, and it can’t be fixed by more of the same that got us into this mess. The Chamber lackeys will say and do just about anything to defeat Hometown Democracy. They figure that if their lie gets told enough times people will be absolutely confused and begin to think it’s the truth. Just like the Swift-boating campaign of 2004, watch for a tidal wave of misinformation about Hometown Democracy that is just starting and will bombard us as we approach the 2010 election. Most Americans now recognize and despise such nasty and certainly unethical tactics. But now you’ve been warned what to watch for.” Carlson, a Florida native and resident of New Smyrna Beach, spent 26 years in the U.S. Army, retiring as a sergeant-major. Also: Hometown Democracy: People want right to say no By Maggy Hurchalla, guest columnist —STUART NEWS Wednesday, December 19, 2007 It’s easy to tell who the bad guys are in the Hometown Democracy debate. They lie so viciously and creatively that they make normal dirty politics seem friendly. They are committing huge piles of money to say and do whatever is necessary to stop Florida Hometown Democracy from getting on the ballot. They clearly believe that people will vote for it and it will slow growth. And then there are the innocents — the frustrated, angry public that have watched the best planning laws in the country turn into bureaucratic pablum. They want the right to just say “no.” What’s puzzling are the good guys caught in between. Tom Pelham, one of Florida’s better state planning directors in the past, is fighting Hometown Democracy while warning the Legislature that growth management in Florida has failed. 1000 Friends of Florida is reluctantly and ever so politely not a friend of Hometown Democracy. The American Planning Association state chapter is afraid of it. When your thoughtful friends question a decision, it’s time to stop and think. I have thought long and hard over all the arguments against it. I think my hopeful friends in the middle are wrong. Opponents go on and on about how difficult it will be to vote on each and every comprehensive plan amendment. They miss the point that local governments are handing out amendments like chewing gum. The problem is that we have too many amendments. Everyone agrees that our

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EyeonMiami Needs your help! Miami,Florida
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